Over the years Rautavaara has spoken to audiences in a variety of styles. Some
of his works are strongly avant-garde; others are more lyrically accessible.
Whichever style you encounter he always orchestrates with stark yet poetic
clarity.

The Violin Concerto is getting on for three decades old. In two movements,
the first of these is extremely lyrical with the violin often dizzyingly high
in its range. It operates quietly - a picture in sound of an ice cavern: crystalline,
glistening; The Lark Ascending meditating on the Berg concerto or the
Szymanowskis. The second movement is more explosive. In both movements the
composer keeps in touch with the Finnish countryside and especially in the
first there are links with the nature painting of his remarkable Cantus
Arcticus. Oliveira digs deeply into his role. I am pleased that we have
the even, yet intensely succulent and poignant tone of Oliveira to present
this work to the world. The work was written in New York with technical assistance
from Eugene Sarbu.
The compact Cello Concerto saws away deep in the auburn territory between
baritone and bass - heavy with premonition and a chant-like soul. It marks
in undiluted lyrical terms a turning away from dodecaphony. Textures are left
bare yet never Spartan. Some of the writing is reminiscent of Barber (sultry)
and Schuman (springy, powered and athletic) yet more melodic than either of
them - the mark of his New York years perhaps.

Olli Kosonen worked with Rautavaara on Angel of Dusk - the
Concerto for Double Bass and recorded it for Finlandia.
The lustrous canvas gleams in the hands of Esko Laine and the Tapiola Sinfonietta.
This is at one level yet the music surges with tidal power at lower levels.
The last two movements hum with dark chaotic tension and cello acts as a tireless
cantor redolent of the relationship between solo and orchestra in Rubbra’s Soliloquy (Cello
Classics and Lyrita).
Especially in the finale one is occasionally reminded in the string writing
of 1960s Penderecki but the dominance here is lyrical. The recording used here
has been licensed from Bis (BIS-CD-910) - credit to the two companies for such
open-minded collaboration in the interests of Ondine’s enlightened endeavour
on behalf of Rautavaara. Angel of Dusk is part of the composer’s Angels series: Angels
and Visitations, Playgrounds for Angels and Angel of Light.
We next hear two works for harp and orchestra. The overture-length Balladis
both Baltic-poetic and wildly emotional. It shudders with fracture lines. The
music reminds me of a sort of avant-garde extension of Sibelius’s The
Bard - more emotionally candid. The Harp Concerto is in three movements.
The solo - here played by Marielle Nordmann - is bolstered by two ‘assisting’ harps
which enable the harp voicings to be heard above the otherwise overpowering
phalanx of orchestral sound. The music is at the surface redolent of Ravel’s Introduction
and Allegro and Debussy’s Danses Sacrée et Danses Profanes.
There’s a superb fullness of heart and generous eloquence of romantic
expression about the slightly Vaughan Williamsy central movement and the gloriously
romantic-filmic finale. CD 2 ends with the work through which I discovered
Rautavaara: Cantus Arcticus. I can be precise. It was 15 June
1982 when the BBC broadcast a performance in which Ian Reid conducted the University
of London Orchestra in the work’s first UK broadcast. The work was written
in Oulu in 1972 and uses the lonely-sounding birdsong recordings the composer
had made in northern Finland as the solo voices. The noble grand theme carried
by the baritonal strings at 3:20 onwards in the first movement never fails
to make an impact; neither does its counterpart in the finale: man and nature
- eternity and transience. I do not prefer this recording to the atmospheric
tape I have of the 1982 broadcast or the Finlandia version by the Klemetti
Institute Symphony Orchestra with Pertti Pekkanen. The others allow a more
elusive atmosphere to pervade but cannot compare in audio-technical terms.
The admirable Ondine team have produced a recording of great forward immediacy
and directness not always apt to this wonderful and emotionally overpowering
work. It superbly brings off a marriage between real birdsong and the
orchestra - something Messiaen steered clear of doing and is infinitely more
subtle than say Respighi’s The Birds. It is a visual counterpart
to the French film: Winged Migration.
On CD 3 we first encounter the Flute Concerto. It’s not quite
what it seems from the title. Each of the four movements deploys a different
instrument: concert flute, piccolo, alto flute and bass flute. It’s a
multi-faceted piece with suggestions along the way of a Baltic faun, a stomping Til
Eulenspiegel figure, the grand emotional nobility of a typical Rautavaara
string theme and a dash more 1970s modernism than usual. The Clarinet Concerto was
written specifically for the player here, the American soloist Richard Stoltzmann.
The characteristic nobility of Rautavaara’s slowly blossoming themes
can be heard here. This is alongside Stoltzmann’s virtuosity and poignant
emotionalism - try the central and very touching Adagio assai and the
end of the first movement which reminded me of Nyman. The finale has more tragic
violence abut it than usual. The work was written in close cooperation with
Stoltzmann. The Annunciations Concerto is for organ, brass quintet
and symphonic wind orchestra. Mysteries, Paeans and Furies inhabit its pages
alongside other now well-recognised Rautavaara hallmarks: the flutter of avian
voices and an innate nobility.

The final CD sensibly couples the three piano concertos: 1969, 1989 and 1998.
The Piano Concerto No. 1 was written as a vehicle for the composer as
pianist. He toured it around Finland. It’s clangour and clamour carries
a noble light-filled theme clearly related to the grand string orchestra themes
used in Cantus Arcticus. Much of the solo writing is epic and quarry-hewn
colossal. The Piano Concerto No. 2 is a shade less angular but just
as tidally propulsive, swirling, troubled-surreal and at times rhetorical -
something of an emotional whirlpool of a piece. The Piano Concerto No. 3Gift
of Dreams was written with Ashkenazy’s wish that the work be
written to allow him to conduct from the keyboard. The first movement is calmly
hieratic - with the music operating like a spell for nobility- an invocation.
The strings sing out in massed power before stony heroic affirmation from the
piano which fades down into a shaded peace. This forms a seamless segue into
the calming Adagio assai which is yet not without rhetoric and granitic
dissonance from the piano soloist. Strange how the solo piano part made me
think of John Ireland (Legend and Concerto) and Bax (Symphonic
Variations and Winter Legends). The final Energico has the
bubbling wind writing of Cantus Arcticus but is overall a thornier and
more apocalyptically angular work than the title might have lead you to believe.
That said, its final bell-swung pages leave a glow that will draw you back.
The terse and to-the-point liner-notes are by Kimmo Korhonen and are in English
and Finnish.

The overarching commitment and sympathetic insights of different engineers,
conductors and orchestras are patent.

It is perhaps important to note that this box does not include all Rautavaara’s
concertos. It does not make this claim. It does not for example include the Percussion
Concerto Incantations.

These recordings were produced in collaboration with the composer between 1991
and 2005 and have been previously released to international popular and critical
acclaim. Their original issue and provenance is given in the head-note.

Ondine has the field to itself as a single collected edition of the Rautavaara
concertos. The rewards are great so don’t hesitate if you are at all
interested or tempted. If the idea of twelve concertos by Rautavaara is too
much then don’t overlook exploring individual discs including the Naxos version
of piano concertos 2 and 3.

This superb box is a wonderful successor to Ondine’s similar 4 CD venture
for the eight symphonies on ODE1145-2Q.
The two sets make ideal companions.